4.8 Article

Quantitative Analysis of DNA Methylation Profiles in Lung Cancer Identifies Aberrant DNA Methylation of Specific Genes and Its Association with Gender and Cancer Risk Factors

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CANCER RESEARCH
卷 69, 期 1, 页码 243-252

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AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-08-2489

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  1. la Ligue National (Francaise) Centre le Cancer
  2. U.S. NIH/National Cancer Institute
  3. Association poor la Recherche sur le Cancer, France
  4. la Ligue Nationale Conlre le Cancer, France
  5. European Network of Excellence Environmental Cancer Risk, Nutrition and Individual Susceptibility
  6. Swiss Bridge Award
  7. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R03CA122396] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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The global increase in lung cancer burden, together with its poor survival and resistance to classical chemotherapy, underscores the need for identification of critical molecular events involved in lung carcinogenesis. Here, we have applied quantitative profiling of DNA methylation states in at panel of five cancer-associated genes (CDH1, CDKN2A, GSTP1, MTHFR, and RASSFIA) to a large case-control study of lung cancer. Our analyses revealed a high frequency of aberrant hypermethylation of MTHFR, RASSF1A, and CDKN2A in lung tumors as SF compared with control blood samples, whereas no significant increase in methylation levels of GSTP1 and CDH1 was observed, consistent with the notion that aberrant DNA methylation occurs in a tumor-specific and gene-specific manner. Importantly, we found that tobacco smoking, sex, and alcohol intake had a strong influence on the methylation levels of distinct genes (RASSF1A and MTHFR), whereas folate intake, age, and histologic subtype had no significant influence on methylation states. We observed a strong association between MTHFR hypermethylation in lung cancer and tobacco smoking, whereas methylation levels of CDH1, CDKN2A, GSTP1 and RASSFIA were not associated with smoking, indicating that tobacco smoke targets specific genes for hypermethylation. We also found that. methylation levels in RASSFIA, but not, the other genes under study, were influenced by sex, with males showing higher levels of methylation. Together, this study identifies aberrant. DNA methylation patterns in lung cancer and thus exemplifies the mechanism by which environmental factors may interact with key genes involved in tumor suppression and contribute to lung cancer. [Cancer lies 2009;69(1):243-52]

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